Photosystem II (PSII) initiates photosynthesis in plants through the absorption of light and subsequent conversion of excitation energy to chemical energy via charge separation. The pigment binding proteins associated with PSII assemble in the grana membrane into PSII supercomplexes and surrounding light harvesting complex II trimers. To understand the high efficiency of light harvesting in PSII requires quantitative insight into energy transfer and charge separation in PSII supercomplexes. We have constructed the first structure-based model of energy transfer in PSII supercomplexes. This model shows that the kinetics of light harvesting cannot be simplified to a single rate limiting step. Instead, substantial contributions arise from both excitation diffusion through the antenna pigments and transfer from the antenna to the reaction center (RC), where charge separation occurs. Because of the lack of a rate-limiting step, fitting kinetic models to fluorescence lifetime data cannot be used to derive mechanistic insight on light harvesting in PSII. This model will clarify the interpretation of chlorophyll fluorescence data from PSII supercomplexes, grana membranes, and leaves.
SignificanceTo harness sunlight for growth, plants and algae rapidly convey absorbed excitation energy from antennae pigments to a reaction center, where the excitations convert to chemical energy. In deep water environments, cryptophyte algae survive by using the molecular motion of phycobiliprotein antennae to funnel excitations to low-energy pigments. The mechanism of down-conversion in phycobiliproteins remains controversial: Could specific vibrations resonant with pigment energy gaps support coherence between excited states and thereby enhance the rate of transport by transient delocalization? Here, we demonstrate that down-conversion in a specific phycobiliprotein, PC645, is both incoherent and enhanced by a broad range of high-frequency vibrations. We suggest that a similar incoherent mechanism is appropriate across phycobiliproteins.
The first step of photosynthesis in plants is the absorption of sunlight by pigments in the antenna complexes of photosystem II (PSII), followed by transfer of the nascent excitation energy to the reaction centers, where long-term storage as chemical energy is initiated. Quantum mechanical mechanisms must be invoked to explain the transport of excitation within individual antenna. However, it is unclear how these mechanisms influence transfer across assemblies of antenna and thus the photochemical yield at reaction centers in the functional thylakoid membrane. Here, we model light harvesting at the several-hundred-nanometer scale of the PSII membrane, while preserving the dominant quantum effects previously observed in individual complexes. We show that excitation moves diffusively through the antenna with a diffusion length of 50 nm until it reaches a reaction center, where charge separation serves as an energetic trap. The diffusion length is a single parameter that incorporates the enhancing effect of excited state delocalization on individual rates of energy transfer as well as the complex kinetics that arise due to energy transfer and loss by decay to the ground state. The diffusion length determines PSII's high quantum efficiency in ideal conditions, as well as how it is altered by the membrane morphology and the closure of reaction centers. We anticipate that the model will be useful in resolving the nonphotochemical quenching mechanisms that PSII employs in conditions of high light stress.excitation energy transfer | quantum coherence | structure−function relationships | photosynthesis | fluorescence lifetime T he first step of photosynthesis is light harvesting, the absorption and conversion of sunlight into chemical energy. In photosynthetic organisms, the functional units of light harvesting are self-assembled arrays of pigment-protein complexes called photosystems. Antenna complexes absorb and transfer the nascent excitation energy to reaction centers, where long-term storage as chemical energy is initiated (1). In plants, photosystem II (PSII) flexibly responds to changes in sunlight intensity on a seconds to minutes time scale. In dim light, under ideal conditions, PSII harvests light with a >80% quantum efficiency (2), whereas, in intense sunlight PSII dissipates excess absorbed light safely as heat via nonphotochemical quenching pathways (3). The ability of PSII to switch between efficient and dissipative states is important for optimal plant fitness in natural sunlight conditions (4). Understanding how PSII's function arises from the structure of its constituent pigment−protein complexes is a prerequisite for systematically engineering the light-harvesting apparatus in crops (5-7) and could be useful for designing artificial materials with the same flexible properties (8, 9).Recent advances have established structure−function relationships within individual pigment−protein complexes, but not how these relationships affect the functioning of the dynamic PSII (grana) membrane (10). Electron micros...
Photosynthetic antennae and organic electronic materials use topological, structural, and molecular control of delocalized excitons to enhance and direct energy transfer. Interactions between the transition dipoles of individual chromophore units allow for coherent delocalization across multiple molecular sites. This delocalization, for specific geometries, greatly enhances the transition dipole moment of the lowest energy excitonic state relative to the chromophore and increases its radiative rate, a phenomenon known as superradiance. In this study, we show that ordered, self-assembled light-harvesting nanotubes (LHNs) display excitation-induced photobrightening and photodarkening. These changes in quantum yield arise due to changes in energetic disorder, which in turn increases/decreases excitonic superradiance. Through a combination of experiment and modeling, we show that intense illumination induces different types of chemical change in LHNs that reproducibly alter absorption and fluorescence properties, indicating control over excitonic delocalization. We also show that changes in spectral width and shift can be sensitive measures of system dimensionality, illustrating the mixed 1-2D nature of LHN excitons. Our results demonstrate a path forward for mastery of energetic disorder in an excitonic antenna, with implications for fundamental studies of coherent energy transport.
The rotationally resolved infrared spectrum of the Na(+)-H(2) cation complex is recorded in the H-H stretch region (4067-4118 cm(-1)) by monitoring the production of Na(+) photofragments. Altogether 42 lines are identified, 40 of which are assigned to K(a)=1-1 transitions (associated with complexes containing ortho-H(2)) and two tentatively assigned to K(a)=0-0 transitions (associated with complexes containing para-H(2)). The K(a)=1-1 subband lines were fitted using a Watson A-reduced Hamiltonian, yielding effective spectroscopic constants. The band origin is estimated as 4094.6 cm(-1), a shift of -66.6 cm(-1) with respect to the Q(1)(0) transition of the free H(2) molecule. The results demonstrate that Na(+)-H(2) has a T-shaped equilibrium configuration with the Na(+) ion attached to a slightly perturbed H(2) molecule but that large-amplitude vibrational motions significantly influence the rotational constants derived from the asymmetric rigid rotor analysis. The vibrationally averaged intermolecular separation in the ground vibrational state is estimated as 2.493 A, increasing slightly (by 0.002 A) when the H(2) subunit is vibrationally excited. A new three-dimensional potential energy surface is developed to describe the Na(+)-H(2) complex. Ab initio points calculated using the CCSD(T) method and aug-cc-pVQZ basis set augmented by bond functions are fitted using a reproducing kernel Hilbert space method [Ho et al., J. Chem. Phys. 104, 2584 (1996)] to give an analytical representation of the potential energy surface. Ensuing variational calculations of the rovibrational energy levels demonstrate that the potential energy surface correctly predicts the frequency of the nu(HH) transition (to within 2.9 cm(-1)) and the dissociation energies [842 cm(-1) for Na(+)-H(2)(para) and 888 cm(-1) for Na(+)-H(2)(ortho)]. The B and C rotational constants are slightly underestimated (by 1.7%), while the vibrationally averaged intermolecular separation is overestimated by 0.02 A.
SignificancePlants’ photosynthetic mechanism adjusts to fluctuations in light intensity. Intermittent bright sunlight can damage light-harvesting proteins; to preempt this, plants dissipate excess absorbed excitation energy as heat. Energy-dependent quenching (qE) of excitations occurs on the seconds to minutes timescale through conformational changes in antenna proteins. Using a multiscale model of photosystem II, we show that changes in light harvesting due to qE can be explained using a single parameter, the excitation diffusion length, which decreases as qE activates. These findings have implications for the interpretation of pulse amplitude-modulated fluorescence, a common noninvasive measurement of photosynthetic activity in leaves.
The rapid response of photosynthetic organisms to fluctuations in ambient light intensity is incompletely understood at both the molecular and membrane levels. In this review, we describe research from our group over a 10-year period aimed at identifying the photophysical mechanisms used by plants, algae and mosses to control the efficiency of light harvesting by photosystem II on the seconds-to-minutes time scale. To complement the spectroscopic data, we describe three models capable of describing the measured response at a quantitative level. The review attempts to provide an integrated view that has emerged from our work, and briefly looks forward to future experimental and modelling efforts that will refine and expand our understanding of a process that significantly influences crop yields.
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